Trade up?

to me, a good trigger on a semiauto pistol has some slack to pickup then, crisp line at break. reset should be short, then crisp break again. any suggestions on such a pistol?
 
I stand corrected. Although, I see no benefit in enhanced velocity outweighing the costs (increased recoil, degraded accuracy, and increased gun wear

Not on the USP. They have a recoil reduction system and with an polygonal rifling it is deadly accurate.

I have one in 9mm. :cool:
 
to me, a good trigger on a semiauto pistol has some slack to pickup then, crisp line at break. reset should be short, then crisp break again. any suggestions on such a pistol?

Seems like you are looking for a single action pistol if that is your criteria.

There are tons of good choices out there for a price.
 
to me, a good trigger on a semiauto pistol has some slack to pickup then, crisp line at break. reset should be short, then crisp break again. any suggestions on such a pistol?

A single action only pistol will be the real winner here. That said, some striker fired pistols like the Walther PPQ come pretty close. The P320 is pretty nice too. A Glock will have a much more defined break than the SD9VE, but it will be pretty stiff compared to some pistols. The PPQ is notably lighter in this regard. As others have mentioned though, even less ideal triggers can be shot well. It's really about repetition. Don't forget the value of dry fire practice too.
 
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